Service Family Accommodation Statistics: 2010 to 2023
Published 25 May 2023
This annual publication provides figures on the number of Service Family Accommodation properties in the UK, their condition and the number of vacancies. Accompanying this publication, there is an OpenDocument Spreadsheet (ODS) document which includes the full set of data which underlies the figures and charts discussed in this report.
This edition provides statistics for 2010 to 2023 (as of 31 March each year), with a base year of 2000, and updates figures released in the 2022 edition of this publication, which provided statistics up to 31 March 2022.
Main Points and Trends
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On 31 March 2023 there were 47,800 Service Family Accommodation (SFA) properties in the UK, which is a decrease of 100 compared to the previous year.
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9,100 of these properties are currently vacant (19.0% of the total), an increase from the 8,600 properties (17.9%) as reported in 2022. There are several reasons for the increase in SFA vacancies since 2022 (1.2 percentage point increase). There are a number of SFA requiring significant upgrades which will remain vacant until works are complete, there is a need to retain vacant SFA at sites where there is a known increase in the future requirement, and vacant SFA within the security perimeter of an establishment is difficult to dispose of in isolation. Uncertainty over future housing requirements, will be impacted by the Future Accommodation Model (FAM)[footnote 1] which will increase the number of personnel entitled to SFA.
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The number of SFA properties in England & Wales, has decreased by 100 since the previous year, similarly Scotland has also seen a decrease of 100 from the previous year. Northern Ireland remains unchanged.
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96.8% of UK SFA properties, for which information is available, are assessed as Decent Homes (good condition or requiring minor improvements) or Decent Homes+, a 0.5 percentage point decrease from the previous year. SFA categorised below Decent Homes Standard have not been allocated to families. This is in line with the commitment made in the Armed Forces Covenant not to allocate sub-standard properties.
Further information: [email protected]
Responsible statistician: [email protected]
Background quality report: Background quality report
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Please refer to the Supplementary tables containing all data presented in this publication.
Introduction
The provision of good quality living accommodation for Service personnel and their families is managed by the MOD’s Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO). DIO manages these properties in the UK (and some overseas locations), which includes planning targeted improvement programmes and managing future requirements.
On 1 April 2022 the Future Defence Infrastructure Services (FDIS) Accommodation contracts replaced the National Housing Prime (NHP) contract. These contracts fulfil the Defence requirement for the delivery of effective and responsive accommodation services for Service personnel and their families.
On behalf of DIO, Pinnacle Group Ltd manage the National Accommodation Management Services (NAMS) contract in the UK. Their National Service Centre is the single point of contact for requests from families living in Service Family Accommodation (SFA) including raising repair and maintenance issues, the allocation of homes and conducting move-in and move-out appointments.
Four Regional Accommodation Maintenance Services (RAMS) contracts provide statutory and mandatory checks, repair and maintenance services and the preparation of allocated homes for Service families. Amey manage the Northern and Central regions and VIVO cover the South East and South West.
Private Finance Initiative (PFI) properties are maintained by the PFI contractors, while, for the most part, Bulk Lease Hired properties, typically on a 5 year lease from Annington Homes Limited are managed on their behalf by Touchstone.
In areas where SFA housing stock is unavailable, Service families will be provided with fully serviced privately rented properties, known as Substitute Service Family Accommodation (SSFA). This accommodation is sourced and leased on behalf of the MOD by Mears Group Limited.
For more information about Service Family accommodation, please see the DIO Service Family accommodation website.
For more information about the latest Public Accounts Committee (PAC) focusing on Service Family Accommodation, please see the Parliament PAC website.
A National Statistics publication
The United Kingdom Statistics Authority has designated these statistics as National Statistics, in accordance with the Statistics and Registration Service Act of 2007 and signifying compliance with the Code of Practice for Statistics.
The continued designation of these statistics as National Statistics was confirmed in 2017 following a compliance check by the Office for Statistics Regulation. The statistics last underwent a full assessment against the Code of Practice in 2012.
Designation can be broadly interpreted to mean that the statistics:
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meet identified user needs;
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are well explained and readily accessible;
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are produced according to sound methods; and
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are managed impartially and objectively in the public interest.
Once statistics have been designated as National Statistics it is a statutory requirement that the Code of Practice shall continue to be observed. Further details about how this report has been developed since its confirmation as National Statistics can be found in the Background Quality Report.
Service Family Accommodation Dwellings in the UK
The following chart shows the number of Service Family Accommodation dwellings between 1997 and 2023 (as of 31 March each year). For each year, numbers of dwellings are rounded to the nearest hundred. Key points from the graph are shown below.
Chart 1: Service Family Accommodation in the UK, 1997-2023 (as of 31 March each year)
A graph showing the number of UK permanent holdings and UK vacant holdings over time.
Source: DIO (Accommodation)
On 31 March 2023, the MOD’s Defence Infrastructure Organisation managed 47,800 UK properties, which is a decrease of 100 compared to the same time in the previous year. The total number of dwellings were reasonably stable between 2009 and 2021 at approximately 50,000. However, there is a longer-term decreasing trend dating back to at least the mid 1990’s. In 1997, there were 68,600 dwellings and since that time MOD policies have led to approximately a 30% decrease in the total number of UK Service Family Accommodation dwellings.
91.6% of UK Service Family Accommodation properties are located within England & Wales, 6.5% in Scotland, and 1.9% in Northern Ireland.
9,100 UK SFA properties were vacant on 31 March 2023 (19.0% of the total), an increase from 8,600 properties in 2022 (17.9% of the total) and an increase on the recent low of 6,000 properties in 2011 (when approximately 12% of the total number of dwellings were vacant).
The DIO holds a required ‘management margin’ of 10%, in line with departmental targets to cover Military personnel being posted to, or moved between Establishments and to allow for property maintenance schedules.
The increase in SFA vacancies since 2022 (1.2 percentage point increase) can be explained by a combination of factors. There are a number of SFA requiring significant upgrades which will remain vacant until works are complete, there is a need to retain vacant SFA at sites where there is a known increase in the future requirement, and vacant SFA within the security perimeter of an establishment is difficult to dispose of in isolation. Uncertainty over future housing requirements, will be impacted by the Future Accommodation Model (FAM) which will increase the number of personnel entitled to SFA.
England & Wales has the lowest vacancy rate, at 18.2%, followed by Scotland (21.1%), and Northern Ireland (49.1%). The particularly high rate in Northern Ireland reflects the inability to dispose of surplus housing within the secure perimeters of the bases due to the prevailing security situation.
Detailed figures on UK permanent holdings and vacant accommodation rates can be found in the accompanying ODS document in Table 1, including splits by country.
A map showing the total number of SFA houses in the UK split by home country.
Source: DIO (Accommodation)
A map showing the vacant rates in the UK split by home country.
Source: DIO (Accommodation)
Condition of Service Family Accommodation in the UK
The overall condition of Service Family Accommodation is kept under regular review. The method of assessing its condition changed significantly in April 2016, when the Combined Accommodation Assessment System was introduced replacing DIO’s ‘Standard for Condition’ as the reported measure of condition. Dwellings are now assessed in accordance with the Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities (formerly the Department of Communities and Local Government) ‘Decent Homes Standard’ (DHS)[footnote 2] and a somewhat enhanced Decent Homes+ (DH+) standard bespoke to SFA.
Prior to 2016, the SFA standard was measured using DIO’s ‘Standard for Condition’. As of 31 March 2016, 99.5% of SFA was either Standard 1 or Standard 2.
A “Decent Home” is determined by the national standard and requires SFA properties to meet all of the following four criteria:
Criterion 1: SFA meets the statutory minimum standard for housing as set out in the Housing Health and Safety Rating System;
Criterion 2: SFA is in a reasonable state of repair (assessed from the age and condition of a range of building components including walls, roofs, windows, doors, chimneys, electrics and heating systems);
Criterion 3: SFA has reasonably modern facilities and services (assessed according to the age, size and layout/location of the kitchen, bathroom and WC and any common areas for blocks of flats, and to noise insulation)
Criterion 4: SFA has a reasonable degree of thermal comfort. This is assessed using the Government’s Standard Assessment Procedure (SAP) for measuring energy efficiency at the following thresholds:
(1) DH+ SAP 55 and above;
(2) DH SAP 54 to 39;
(3) DH- SAP 38 and below.
Condition | Decent Homes Plus (DH+) | Decent Homes (DH) | Decent Homes Minus (DH-) |
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Statutory minimum standard | Pass | Pass | Fail any one of the four criteria |
Reasonable state of repair | Pass | Pass | Fail any one of the four criteria |
Reasonably modern facilities and services | Pass enhanced standard | Pass normal standard | Fail any one of the four criteria |
Thermal comfort | Energy rating Band D or above | Energy rating Band E | Energy rating Band F or below |
As of 31 March 2023, Service Family Accommodation fell into the following categories (figures are rounded to the nearest hundred):
- 45,800 properties (95.7% of the total) were rated as Decent Homes or Decent Homes+:
- 41,800 properties (87.5% of the total) were rated as Decent Homes+.
- 3,900 properties (8.2% of the total) were rated as Decent Homes.
- 1,500 properties (3.2% of the total) were rated as Decent Homes- (or below the recommended standard).
- 500 (1.1% of the total) properties (were temporarily managed under separate arrangements from MOD and) did not have a recorded condition.
Chart 2: Condition of UK Service Family Accommodation, 2022 and 2023 (as of 31 March each year)
A graph showing the percentage split of decent homes condition in 2022 and 2023.
Source: DIO (Accommodation)
Detailed figures on UK permanent holdings by surveyed condition can be found in Table 2.
Methodology
The Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) is the estate expert for defence, supporting the armed forces to enable military capability by planning, building, maintaining, and servicing infrastructure. We are responsible for enabling defence people to live, work, train and deploy at home and overseas. Our vision is to equip defence with a significantly smaller, more efficient, better quality estate.
For more information, visit the Defence Infrastructure Organisation website
DIO is responsible for managing all the Service Family Accommodation (SFA) for the Royal Navy and Marines, the Army, and the Royal Air Force in the UK. DIO Accommodation manages the operations of SFA and the Head of Accommodation reports to the DIO Accommodation Director.
DIO Accommodation provides SFA for entitled Service personnel in accordance with Tri-Service Accommodation Regulations, as well as for other entitled/eligible personnel, and for core welfare purposes. SFA can also be utilised for other Defence purposes such as Single Living Accommodation.
DIO Accommodation also reports on the number of Substitute Service Family Accommodation (SSFA) properties occupied by entitled Service personnel, i.e. those who would otherwise occupy SFA were it available when and where required. As SSFA is private property, it is not part of DIO housing stock, and is provided under short term contract.
In November 1996, most of the MOD’s housing stock in England and Wales was sold to a private company, Annington Homes Limited (AHL). The homes required for Service families were then leased back on a 200-year lease, with the condition that the MOD can hand surplus properties back to AHL.
For more information on SFA, please see the DIO website.
Please see the June 2016 National Audit Office report into SFA.
Data Sources and Quality
Data on housing is provided by regional contractors to DIO, who enter it into an electronic asset register (database). Each year, data as of 31 March is extracted from this system by DIO and collated to produce the tables.
The data in these tables has been extracted from an MOD database which is reliable and there are no significant concerns regarding its accuracy. In addition to validation by DIO, the data in these tables has been subjected to a check by Government Statisticians.
Further information can be found in the Background Quality Report.
Further Information
Rounding
In this publication, figures are given to the nearest hundred and percentages to one decimal place. Where rounding has been used, totals and sub-totals have been rounded separately and so may not equal the sums of their rounded parts.
Revisions
There are no revisions to this edition.
Corrections to the published statistics will be made if errors are found, or if figures change as a result of improvements to methodology or changes to definitions. When making corrections, we will follow the Ministry of Defence Statistics Revisions and Corrections Policy. All corrected figures will be identified by the shorthand [r], and an explanation will be given for the reason and size of the revision. Corrections which would have a significant impact on the utility of the statistics will be corrected as soon as possible, by reissuing the publication. Minor errors will also be corrected, but for convenience the publication of these corrections may be timed to coincide with the next annual release.
Contact Us
This publication has been produced by the Data Exploitation team in the Defence Infrastructure Organisation.
We welcome feedback on our statistical products. If you have any comments or questions about this publication or about our statistics in general, you can contact us as follows:
Data Exploitation team (DIO)
Email: [email protected]
If you require information which is not available within this or other available publications, you may wish to submit a Request for Information under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 to the Ministry of Defence.
If you wish to correspond by mail, our postal address is:
Data Exploitation (National Statistics)
Defence Infrastructure Organisation Head Office
St George’s House
DMS Whittington
Lichfield
Staffordshire
WS14 9PY
For general MOD enquiries, please call: 020 7218 9000
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Future Accommodation Model (FAM): https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/future-accommodation-model-what-you-need-to-know ↩
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‘A Decent Homes: Definition and guidance for implementation. Communities and Local Government June 2006: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/7812/138355.pdf ↩